Miami Herald (Sunday)

Despite ‘quiet,’ Fed leaders have loudly backed continued rate hikes to thwart inflation

- BY TOM HUDSON Tom Hudson is a financial journalist based in Washington, D.C. He’s the chief content officer at WAMU public radio station.

For a little more than a week before each of its interestra­te setting meetings, the Federal Reserve falls silent. The central bank calls it a blackout period. It’s a time when its leaders stop shedding light on their views of the American economy and go mute on the range of decisions they may make when they gather.

Not that there hasn’t been plenty of “open mouth” policy being practiced leading up to this week. At least four regional Fed presidents in the past week signaled their aggressive rate hikes are necessary to fight inflation, an indication of support to continue raising borrowing rates quickly in efforts to squeeze inflation.

The investment markets are banking on another three-quarters of 1% rate hike — the Fed’s fourth in a row — when it meets in early November. The last piece of economic evidence the central bankers will get before confirming the market’s expectatio­n will be the Personal Consumptio­n Expenditur­es. The September data will be released Friday.

The PCE is the Fed’s favored inflation barometer. It’s a bit more dynamic than the betterknow­n Consumer Price Index. The CPI get headlines, but is a measuremen­t of a more static basket of goods and services. The difference­s between the two are for economic textbooks, not consumers. The PCE is faster to pick up on changes in what people are buying. So, if shoppers switch from name-brand crackers to store-brand to save some money, the PCE should reveal that.

Recent data has indicated an ever-so-slight cooling from the 41-year high inflation hit in June. Not that anyone has experience­d much of it except maybe at the gas pump. People know that prices are up and staying up. They see it in the supermarke­t dairy aisle, the shoe store and holiday travel plans. But is the speed of price increases meaningful­ly slowing?

The Federal Reserve hopes so, yet it isn’t about to ease its effort to combat inflation by continuing aggressive interest-rate hikes next month. The bankers have been very noisy about that.

 ?? Associated Press ?? With interest rates rising, homeowners are finding refinancin­g isn’t that attractive anymore.
Associated Press With interest rates rising, homeowners are finding refinancin­g isn’t that attractive anymore.
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